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A78217 Ichnographia. Or A model of the primitive congregational way: wherein satisfaction is offered, by unfolding (according to the Scriptures) what the right order of the Gospel, and way of the saints in the visible worshipping of God is, in the dayes of the New Testament. And how the saints in these dayes may walk up to it, notwithstanding their present hindrances. Together with the maine points in controversie, touching the right visible church-state Christ hath instituted under the Gospel, with the extent of church-officers, and power of particular visible churches, and continuance of divine ordinances and institutions under the defection and apostasie of Antichrist. By W. Bartlet, Minister of the Gospel, at Wapping. Bartlet, William, 1609 or 10-1682. 1647 (1647) Wing B986; Thomason E381_17; ESTC R201418 140,788 175

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carelessnes of those that were set over the Field to keepe it Mat. 13.39 So that if they be in the church he hath no hand in it t is not by his allowance much lesse his appointment and ordination and therefore to make this more cleare I adde this 2. reason that if Jesus Christ never ordained that wicked men should be matter of his house stones in his building because if this should be true then all those commands of Christ for casting them out of his church when they are discovered to be in should be void to no purpose for if that wicked men which are the Tares be the true matter of a church of the true constitution of a visible Church then they are to be let alone not cast out lest in so doing we destroy the church sin against the commandement of Christ So that notwithstanding what is said for the matter of the parish churches we see they cannot be found to be according to the first constitution of the Gospell and I feare those that go about to set up a new building of Reformation upon this rotten foundation will find in a short time that all they do will fall about their own eares 3. Again it may be further demanded how these parish-churches do answer to the church we have formerly spoken of in respect of their union and knitting together by a free and voluntary consent which is the forme of a true visible church of Christ hath there ever been such a knitting and combination of the Officers and Members in an holy and unanimous consent and agreement to walke together as we have formerly shewed according to the rule of Christ in the Gospell c. Is not the contrary evident For 1. Have not those parishes been time out of mind under one visible Antichristian church-government and rule for the outward worship of God and dispensation of Ordinances 2. Have not Prelates and Patrons imposed preachers over those parishes without yea many times against the approbation and consent of the People 3. Have not the godly with the wicked in those parishes been alwayes mixed together in the ordinances and worship of God making up one church frame and constitution without any separation 4. Hath not co-habitation and comming within the bounds and precincts of a parish been sufficient to make a person a member of the Church in their sence though never so notorious a liver so he be not poor and through his charge of children burthensome to the parish never enquiring whether he be capable of communion with Christ and his Saints in the enjoyment of the Ordinances 5. Wherefore else is it that now in these times of greater light and liberty that many of our Presbyterian bretheren do beginne to gather the godly in their parishes into a body of themselves separating the precious from the vile in a way of acknowledging what worke of grace the Lord hath wrought in them of which there would I conceive be no need if they were already united and embodyed together 4. Lastly to speake nothing of the rule by which they walke in the worship of God it may be demanded how these parish Churches do answer to the pattern before set down according to the Gospell in point of Discipline and government do they enjoy the priviledges of church power within themselves without subordination to others Have they not generally to this day been without it standing formerly under the authority of the Lord Bishops and their Courts that used them at their pleasure and led them captive to their wills Did not both Priest and people dance after their pipe And if the classicall government do now take place is it not to be feared that they will be poore soules In statu quo priùs under as great bondage if not greater then before But for that we leave it till time the discoverer of all things make the truth known in this particular 5. Another inference from the former position is this to shew how great the sinne is of those that are called Seekers that have been professed members of such a particular church of Saints rightly constituted according to the order of the Gospell but now have left it denying any such church or churches and Ministery to be and so have left all communion with Christ and his Saints in the ordinances of his worship expecting a Ministery accompanied with the gifts of Miracles as in the Apostles dayes But such men do not see how much Sathan hath blinded their eyes I shall speake more largely and directly to them in the fourth chapter of this Treatise 6. Then it will follow in the last place that the bretheren of the congregational way are not guilty of all those foule crimes of errour heresie blasphemyes and of making schismes and rents in the church of Christ as they are accused by the tongues and pennes both of Preachers and professors in the Presbyterian way for the judicious Reader may see by what hath been already and is yet further to be laid downe that those that walke in this Separated Church-state from the world do not swerve from the way of the Lord which he himselfe hath instituted and commanded nor from the judgement and practise of those that have been some of the famous lights that have shined in this Kingdome and therefore after all those former aspersions have been laid and cast upon them they will be found in the truth and God will make their enemies ashamed that ever they should write such volumnes and waste so many precious houres to oppose and vex their righteous soules for Magna est veritas et praevalebit CHAP. III. That the severall administrations of this Church-state especially for Seales and Censures are now in these dayes since the death of the Apostles and extraordinary Church-officers and governours limited to and bounded within every particular Church the Officers of one Congregation may not ordinarily in common as the Apostles did administer the Seales and Censures that belongs to another Congregation Now the truth of this I shall endeavour to make out in these ten following Conclusions 1. THat all Ministeriall power for administration of Seales and execution of Church censures was first given in commission to the Apostles only as these Scriptures hold forth Mat. 20.19 Joh. 20.21 22 23. 1 Cor. 11.23 And therefore we read oftentimes of Peters baptising Cornelius and others Acts 10. and Pauls excommunicating of Alexander 1 Tim. 1.20 and such like acts of theirs which they did by themselves alone as the first Subjects of this executive Church-power 2. That these Apostles were immediately called and extraordinarily gifted by Christ for this worke and employment of their Ministery Joh. 20.21 22. Gal. 1.1 Act. 2.4 1 Cor. 12. 3. That these extraordinary officers were only Protempore and so were the last as well as the first subject of this power and authority so that when they dyed their extraordinary call and commission together with their
if Christ hath instituted as we have shewed such an externall Church politye for his Saints to observe to his comming again how then dare men deny it may they not as well deny the scriptures themselves by placing all in the office and worke of the spirit within us without the use of any externall rule or meanes to worship God by And the truth is that to this at last men come speaking very basely and unworthily if not blasphemously of the scriptures But before I leave those men if it may please the Lord to sh●w them the ev●ll of their way I would faine know of them whether it were not the practice of Jesus Christ himselfe in the dayes of his fl sh and his Apostles after him whom he substituted in his roome and appointed to give out his divine will concerning the ordinances of his kingdome to live in the use and practic● of outward worship and ordinances Did not Christ himselfe pract ce preaching praying Baptisme Supper c. and so the Apostles after him and did they not give the Churches this in charge that they sh●uld tread in their steps and be followers of them as they were of Christ and can it be denyed that the O●dinan●es of God are those sacred things in and by which the Saints come to have lively fellowship and communion with God N●ither let men think it sufficient to say that they have fellowship with God without and above ordinances for then it would follow that men should live in fellowship with God without worshipping and serving of him in that way he hath prescribed viz. by observing those duties and ordinances which Jesus Christ hath instituted and commanded in his Word as preaching prayer singing receiving the Sacraments executing the censures c. in Church fellowship as hath been and shall be farther noted in the following discourse And therefore if these men desire to be found in the number of those that Christ calls his friends ●●hn 14.15 let them labour to doe what he hath commanded them and not slight the way of his visible worship and ordinances which he hath instituted for his Churches to walk in till his comming againe when he shall deliver up the Kingdome to his Father and have put downe all rule and authority and power in 1 Cor. 15.14 2. The other sort of men contrary minded to this blessed truth are those that teach and write for sound doctiine that Jesus Christ hath not sole power of headship over the Church in appointing and ordering this visible Church-state for all Nations to observe and ke●p but it is in the power of men also to appoint and set up a frame of Church-Government and order for men to serve and worship God by according to the nature and frame of those States and Kingdomes wherein they live and the foundation they build on is by distinguishing betweene a Supreame principall headship and a Ministeriall subordinate headship They doe not deny but Christ is the supreame Head over all but then they would faine make the world believe if it lay in their power that there is a secondary and subordinate headship which Iesus Christ hath deligated in his room and hath left power and authority with to make lawes to his Church and they say that this Ministeriall headship may stand wel enough with the Principal and Supream as a Vice-Roy may stand with a King but I utterly deny it affirming it to be a distinction coined in the Popes conclave at Rome and holy Baines in his Commentary on Col. 2.19 shews it to be altogether unsound 1. Because it is contradictory for it is such an essentiall property of an head to be principall and have rule that what is not thus is not an head 2. Who ever heard of any secundary ministeriall head in a naturall body without deformity Now it is a naturall body with which Christ doth compare himselfe in this respect 3. That which is a ministeriall head must doe the work of an head but that none can doe the work is double internall or externall influence regiment or direction Of the first it is granted for the other of Regiment The Apostle themselves w● not Heads of but servants 〈◊〉 the Churche● Id. ibid. the Scripture denyeth it to any but Christ the Prince of Pastors leaving to all other a power ministeriall onely to serve the Churches as superior unto them 4. No Direction which is dependent is the direction of an Head as the hand leading and drawing up the foot directeth it but is not an head to it because the direction of the hand commeth from the principality of the head reported unto it As for those instances that are brought for the upholding of the former distinction he answers them cleerly and shews that the union of the Church the Scripture teacheth to depend on Christ and his S●irit and not on a visible head Men may have many names properly attributed to them but this improperly Kings may suffer men to be called Noble Wise Rich but to be called Kings within his Dominion is not permitted because there is nothing more derogatory from the glory of his Crowne So here And what this l●arned man hath spoken in the former place is confirmed both by Ancient and Moderne Divines against the Papists as is easie to prove And sufficient might be added from the Sermons which have been pr●ached for these severall yeeres before the Honourable Houses of Parliament by learned men of all sorts but I suppose it is needl●s in a busines so cleere and palpable Now if Jesus Christ be sole Head and none joyned in commission with him for the ordering of these affaires that concerne his own and his Fathers spiritu●ll and eternall Kingdom then doubtlesse no Powers on earth Civill or Ecclesiasticall can challenge that honour and authority to themselves which is onely p●oper to Jesus Christ and which he hath reserved to himselfe alone and is communicable to none other besides him Now there are some things which Christ hath reserved to himselfe as for example to erect a spirituall Church and Kingdome to himselfe like himselfe 2. To appoint a ministery worship order government both internall and externall sutable thereunto 3. To give out glorious Gospell truths and doctrines of salvation for the Saints to belleeve and practise 4. To raign and rule in and over the hearts and consciences of the Saints by the mighty Scepter of his Word and Spirit 5. To forgive sinnes to heale diseases to blesse O●dinances to c●allenge praises command homage duty service of the whole man from sinners these and the like things are proper to J●sus Christ as he is the great high Priest Prophet and King of his Church and not communicable to Angels or men and therefore let not humane powers take that to them which is none of their due but belongs to Christ alone Quest What is their due then Ans M. Sprig in his Ancient Bounds hath spoken so much and
have in a little roome given you an Epitome or compendium of the substantiall parts of the Congregationall way according as it is held forth to us in the Scripture especially that which hath been most of all controverted and called into question and so have endeavoured to answer the desire of those that would have us to prove our first Argument The Lord adde his blessing CHAP. VIII This Chapter containes a short exhortation to three sorts of persons 1. Such as are truly godly but are yet strangers to this order of the Gospell 2. Such as are open enemies to this way of the Lord. 3. Such as God hath shewed mercy unto in bringing them to Sion and put their soules in possession of this heavenly priviledge 1. TO such as are godly but yet remaine in their old confusion and are strangers to the right order of the Gospel and instituted way of worshipping God My request is that they would not slight what hath been laid before them and brought unto them but as they tender the honour of Jesus Christ and the comfortable condition of their own soules with all readinesse of mind to receive and entertain what they shall find upon due tryall and examination to be the truth more Arguments then I have formerly given need not to be prest upon you only this I shall make bold to adde and leave upon your soules whether it be not fully declared from Heaven by signes and wonders that God is greatly displeased with your hitherto-neglect of building his house and contenting your selves with any formes of worship and traditions of men so you may enjoy your outward and temporall accommodations as if the enjoyment of communion and fellowship with God the Father and his Son our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in the right and pure wayes of his worship were not infinitely to be preferred before all these sublunary and earthly things and if so why then should you not hasten your repentance and reformation to the purpose in this busines I say to the purpose because halfe worke cannot will not please the Lord Joel 2.12 13. 't was the commendation of Caleb and Joshuah that they followed the Lord fully and wholly in all that the Lord commanded them and made knowne to them to be his will Num. 14.24 and they found the benefit of it for they entered into that good Land whereas the rest that failed of their duty herein even a Moses an Aaron came short so I say it wil be your commendation and shall be your righteousnesse before the Lord if you halt no longer between God and Baal and love no longer to abide in the Tents of the Edomites but make haste to Sion to Ierusalem to build the house of the Lord otherwise if you continue as before loving the flesh-pots of Egypt and the waters of Abanah and parphar rivers of Damascus before and beyond the milke and honey of this Land of Canaan and those Wells of salvation that are to be found in Syon it may be a just and righteous thing with the Lord that you should never live to see better dayes You know what Jesus Christ said to the Cripple that he had shewed mercy to go thy wayes and sinne no more Joh. 5.1 lest a worse thing happen unto thee so give me leave to say to you go your wayes and sinne no more after the old way of dishonouring God and Iesus Christ by worshipping him after the inventions and traditions of men You know he is a jealous God and will not give his glory to any other be he never so great mighty or learned in the World you know he hath borne long with you and winked at your former ignorance Act. 17.2 30. but now he c●ls upon you to repent even of this sinne of false worship he might have cut you off and swept you away in the common deluge of the Sword that was lately on the Land but he hath dealt more kindly and favourably with you wherefore be not as the Israelites of old after such great mercies received to fall upon new provocations lest a worse evill befall you then any yet If our deliverances worke us not up to those holy ends for which they are given us certainly our latter end will be worse then the beginning Yet God waites to see what his People will do in this worke of his pure worship in the building of his house in the honouring of his Son in the setting him up above all in hi● Kingly and Propheticall as well as in his Priestly office which hitherto even the Saints themselves most unkindly have neglected in a great measure Why should you not therefore Velis et Remis with all possible might hasten to answer the Lords expectation Oh trust not your own hearts any longer Oh hearken not to the Syren-like songs and enchantments of the world Oh build not upon the precepts and examples of men no not the wisest greatest learnedest whatsoever but on Iesus Christ as he hath revealed and made himselfe known to us in his Word honour him according to his excellent greatnes and love him according to his excellent goodnes then you shall be honoured loved of him his father more then ever you have yet been Oh wherefore hath God called you out of the world Why hath Christ dyed for you by his blessed Spirit marryed you to himselfe made you partakers of the divine nature if it be not to honour and serve him as he hath required you in his wor● When the Death-bed comes then it will be too late to say would God I had followed the Lord fully and honoured him in lifting up of his Son Jesus Christ in al the wayes of the Gospel though it had cost me the losse of all my outward enjoyments Wherefore that as your lives so your deaths may be sweet and comfortable to you resolve upon this work kiss● the Son bow to his Scepter helpe build up the wall of Sion and throw downe Babylon that you may be found in the number of those that follow the Lambe who are called and chosen and faithfull Rev. 17.24 2. For you that are open enemies to this holy way of the Lord and desperately set your selves by your Pennes and tongues to hinder the progresse and prosperity of it let me tell you from the Lord that of all other men that shall drinke of the cup of the Wine of Gods indignation you are like to have the bottome for if they shall be cursed that come not forth to helpe the Lord what then shall become of those that come forth in all the strength of their rage and malice against the Lord If Jesus Christ will be angry with those that refuse to yeeld him Osculum subjectionis the kisse of subjection and will have those brought forth before him and slain 〈◊〉 27. that will not have him to raign over them what will he do th●n with those that lay their hands upon
Ephes 4.13 have been carried away from their former stedfastnes in the use of those pure Gospell ordinances and institutions and now live and walke up and downe the world as if Jesus Christ were Church-lesse the Saints Christ-lesse yea as if the barrel of Christs Meale and Cruse of his Oyle lockt up in his spirituall ordinances and administrations were altogether drawn dry and exhausted but that I might be a poore instrument in the hands of Christ to deliver such from their false wayes that are yet in Egyptian darknes reduce those to the Tents of the Shepherds that are gone from them where they may again as formerly enjoy their beloved Cant. 1.7.8 and be built up to a further enjoyment of his glory And thus beloved in the Lord you have a briefe discovery of what I have propounded to my selfe touching the method grounds and ends of this Treatise I have only a few things to request at your hands and then I shall dismisse you to the Treatise it selfe and commend both it and you to the blessing of Christ Now that which I have to request of you is this 1. That you would not receive with the left hand what is offered to you with the right but endeavour to put a candid and faire construction as in charity you are bound on the weak endeavours of him that had nothing in his eye but Christs honour and your and the whole Kingdomes welfare 2. In the reading of the following Treatise to take with you the helpe of the Spirit of truth who alone searcheth the deepe things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 and can enable us to judge of spirituall things spiritually If we plough with Christs heifer we shall understand his Riddles whereas if wee consult with flesh and blood in the things of God and measure divine mysteries by the wisdome of this world we shall be so farre from having our expectation answered as that we shall stumble and be offended at them 1 Cor. 1.18 to 26. and 2.14 3. When you meet with an any Scriptures and Arguments that are brought to cleare and confirme any point that you would vouchsafe to take in the whole and consider them together and not apart be cause what may be wanting in some may be made up in the rest For if there be but one or two a-amongst six or ten Texts of Scriptures or Arguments that are produced to prove the truth of any one point that are substantiall and to the purpose its sufficient though the rest are not so strong as if ten men were to lift a burthen together though the one halfe of them were but weake in comparison of the other yet if the worke be done t is sufficient we looke after no more 4. Where Scriptures alleadged do not expresly and in so many words speake out the truth of that they are produced for yet to remember if they do it by a sound and good consequence then that is sufficient as we may see in the practise of our Saviour when he would prove the truth of the resurrection to the Sadduces he doth it not by a Scripture that speakes expresly but only by sound consequence as Mat. 22 31 32. Mark 12.26 27. 5. Not to take offence at the short brief passing through particulars because I undertooke at first to give a draught or platforme only according to the Title of the Booke of the visible Church state which Jesus Christ hath instituted for the SAINTS to observe in the dayes of the New Testament Now in a busines of this nature understanding men will confesse that ●are pointing at truths is sufficient and therefore I purposely avoided the transcribing of most of the Scripture proofes that are cited in this Treatise 6. That wheresover I have been necessita●ed to speake in any of the inferences drawn from the Propositions against those wayes and practises which do vary from what is laid down as the truth whether it be the way of absolute and h●gh classicall Presbyterie over the particular Churches and Congregations of believers or the way of re-baptizing or the way which is only for distinction sake styled The rigid Separation or way of living altogether without visible Ordinances and worship because of the defectivenes is in the administrators or above them in the Spirit as those that look upon the divine institutions of Christ but as shadowes or things indifferent or the way of fashioning the sacred orders and ordinances of Christs Church to the government of civill States and Common-wealths or any other mentioned in the following Treatise it hath not been in the least out of a spirit of contention against those that walk in those different wayes nor to disparage or undervalue their gifts graces with which they are endowed or to infringe their christian liberty by bringing their persons into trouble but in the discharge of my duty towards Christ and the giving occasion for a more cleare discovery of the truth professing my selfe as in the sight of God alwayes ready to performe any christian duty or office of love towards any of them whensoever I shall by providence be called thereunto 7. Lastly if any shall attempt the answering of it I shall in the Spirit of love request him that he would first of all sit downe and consider with himself seriously that whiles he thinks to strike at an errour he may do what in him lyes to wound the truth and so make worke for repentance T is not for me to boast in the least of what is published by so weake an instrument as my selfe but so much I have seen and observed from the first day of the Lords putting me upon it to the time of its publishing besides what I have found in the practise of it that I cannot but expect the truth therein held forth for the substance of it shal stand and take place notwithstanding all the Batteryes and blasts of opposers that shall come against it I know the age I am cast upon to beare witnes to those truths of Christ I have published cannot easily digest what is set before them and so I shall be exposed to the deepest censures that men of evil and perverse spirits who have only a forme of Godlines but deny the power of it in their walking can lay upon me but through infinite riches of mercy I have learnt in some measure to looke above them all and to cast my selfe and the worke I have published on him who is that Alsufficient God and faithfull Creator that is every way able to keepe that is committed to his charge in weldoing and to bring about his glorious ends 1 Pet. 4.19 by weake and contemptible meanes Thus having premised these few things I forbeare troubling you any further in this place having reserved a word of exhortation to you in the end of the Treatise only desiring the Father of mercies and God of all consolation to make the following Treatise effectuall for the bringing over of your
But in Christ there are none for in him there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all fulnes and in him are hid 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all treasures of wisdome Col. 2.3 which cannot be said of the creature what they have is but a drop to his Ocean and that little they have is from him also 7. Lastly in r●spect of the duration and perpetuity of it All other power is perishable uncertaine and fading The Monarchs of the world cannot say of their power and authority that it is everlast●ng as Jesus Ch●ist can 〈◊〉 Dan. 4.34 35. and Esay 9 6 7. Of the encrease of his government there is no end Now if Christ be so ●●inently qualifyed for this worke no wonder if it be put altogether into his hands 3. F●om Christ u●dertaking and perfo●ming it as in Mat. 16. and ●8 17 18. Mat. 28 19 20. Ioh. 20.21 Ephes 4.10 1● 12. 1 Cor. 11.23 and 12.28 In wh●c● plac●s we find a Church state appointed by Christ with offices officers gifts ordinances and government correspondent 4. From the Apostles their disclayming this power and authority professing their work was meerely a * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministery not a Lordship Act. 17. and that they were the servants not only of Christ but of the Churches also 2 Cor. 4 5. Rom. 15.31 and that they had no power or dominion over the faith or consciences of the people but helpers of their joy 2 Cor. 1. ult 5. From the insufficiency of all humane abilities to accomplish this worke which I shall make out three wayes 1. From want of wit and skill to do it 2. From want of a mind and will to do it 3. From want of power nd strength to do it 1. Men have no wit nor skill for this worke all the abilities of the creature are too low to reach such Mysteries as these what could Moses or David or Solomon do towards the building the visible Tabernacle and Temple of old with the ordinances of worship thereunto appertaining if God had not first made them acquainted with it by his Spirit So what could the Prophets and Apostles have done towards the building the living Temple of Chr●sts Church under the New Testament if Jesus Christ had not acquainted them with the order and manner of it from his owne mouth Who hath known the mind of the Lord 1 Cor. 2. ult Doubtlesse if Christ had left this work to the wit and discretion of men we should have had sorry Church worke Whence is it that there are so many divisions and differences amongst men in the world in the matters of Gods house and worship but this that men are darke and ignorant and not acquainted with the mind of Christ revealed in the word 2. As men have no wit nor skill for this busines so neither have they a mind and will to do it Looke we narrowly into the dispositions of men and we shall find how backward they are this w●y As the Apostle spake in his Epistle to the Church at Philippi Phil. 2.21 All seeke their owne but few the things of Iesus Christ men are so taken up with the building their owne houses that they care not what becomes of Gods house as those in the Prophet Haggai●s Hag. ● 2 dayes every man said The time is not yet come to build the house of the Lord. And doubtlesse if Jesus Christ did not carry on the building of his temple further then men are disposed thereunto he might stay long enough for it We are all of us even the best of the Saints of Cranzius disp●sition and temper who answered Luther it were to be wish●d that such a work were done he spake to him about We could wish that Antichrist were down and J●sus Christ exalted on his throne but where is the man that is of Luthers spirit in the things of God Christ and his Cause may sink for ought that men doe to put themselves forward in preserving and forwarding of it And if at any time men doe begin to set upon this worke doe we not see how soone they are discouraged and draw back and are ready to cease and give over as it was with those Jewes that God brought out of Babylon to Jerusalem after they had begun to build how long was it before they finished neere as many yeeres by computation in building the Temple as they had been in Babylon from the Temple There was little heart little stomach in them to this worke Yea though many of them were good men as well as great men every small threat of their adversaries was enough to make them cease building so that the Lord was faine to send Prophet after Prophet to them to spurre and excite them forward to their worke they were called unto And is it not so now in these dayes how long have we beene building Gods house what murmuring what repining what objections what excuses what carnall reasonings Every man is ready to say The time is not yet come and so sad consequences come of it and sadder yet are like to come I feare and all this I say for want of a will of a heart in Gods owne people to this worke And therefore without controversie this is a truth that further then Jesus Christ acts in us by his Spirit men have no mind to the work 3. From want of power and strength to doe it If men had skill and wit for the work yet so long as they want power how should they bring it to passe Now that men want power and strength for this worke is evident from hence 1. In that there are many and mighty enemies to be throwne downe when this Church-state is to be set up great and high Mountaines that must be made Plaines What a great mountaine was there of a Samaritan faction joyned with the power of the Persian Monarchy before Zerubbabel when he c●me in the name of the Lord to build his house that had been laid waste And what a great mountaine is the Romane Empire and that Antichristian State which now opposeth and who shall be able to dry up th great river Euphrates Rev. 16.12 that the way of the Kings of the East may be prepared By which River some understand the Monarchy on which it borders which is the Turkish Empire Now this men cannot doe the stilling the rage of adversaries is beyond the power of men He that shakes the Nations when he comes to this worke Hag. 2.7 he onely can build this house amidst all those commotions and tumults that are made in the world against it This work is the work of a God and not a poore silly worme as Man is And therefore saith the Lord to Zerubbabel Zech. 4.6 Not by might nor by power but by my spirit And againe in Psal 2 6. Yet have I set my King upon my holy hill of Sion It is the work therefore of God and not of men If the Lord should leave this wo●k to the
creature when would his great name be hallowed when would his kingdome come or when would his will be done this way 2. In that there is much rubbish to be cast out that stands in the way of building and setting up this work of the Lord as there was at the building of the wall of Jerusalem Neh. 4.10 a kingdome within us as well as without us to be subdued bef●re this worke of the Lord can take place What 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what strange holds of carnall imaginations and reasonings are there in the hearts of men against this worke of the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 places of defence of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 safe as the Apostle calls them 2 Cor. 10.4 5. How doe men love the reliques of Baal long after the flesh-pots of Egypt their old superstitious wayes of worship they have been accustomed unto how doe they to this day mourne for Tammuz T is no easie matter to prepare the hearts of the people to meet the God of their Fathers and before this be done it will be hard to build this house and Church of God and to doe this the arme of the eternall God must appeare or else all is in vaine as the Psalmist hath it Psal 127.1 Except the Lord build the house they labour in vaine that build it So here especially this house of God that cannot be set up before the hearts of men be prepared Doe not we see by sad experience to this day that people look upon the right order of the Gospel as a light vaine novell thing those too that pretend to great knowledge Now this very opinion of novelty that men have touching this way of Christ is such a hindrance to this work that unlesse the Lord put forth his power on the spirits of men t is not all the men in the world are able to bring them to embrace Reformation and therefore doubtlesse this is Christs work and not the creatures Gods and not mans 6. Lastly to adde no more to what hath been laid down for the clearing of this truth take this onely That the Scriptures do wholly exclude and shut out the Creature from having a hand in this businesse and attribute all to the Lord and this I shall make out I h●pe very plainly and to abundant satisfaction 1. It is evident that the Scriptures never speake in the plurall number of Heads over the Church primary and secundary but only in the singular number of one Head viz. Christ who hath absolute and sole power ju●isdiction and authority in the matters of R●ligion and Worship as Ephes 1.22.5.23 Col. 1.18 2.10 19. and therefore they speak onely of one Law-giver James 4.12 and the government on his shoulders onely and not on any other with him Esay 9 6. 22.21 22 23. 2. It is evident that the Scriptures deny all headship and Lordship to any other besides Christ in the Church 1 Pet. 5.3 Psal 45.11 3. Our Saviour himselfe forbids it to his Disciples and Apostles that were to follow him Mar. 10.42 Luk. 22.25 Mat. 23.8 to 13. Mat. 28.20 4. The Apostles themselves after his departure who had most right of all other to this power altogether disclaim it 2 Cor. 1. ult professing their work was meerly a service and ministery Act. 1.17 not a Lordship as we have noted before And therefore when you meet in reading the Scriptures with such places as these as I ordaine and as I give order in the Churches you are not to understand it of any absolute but onely a derived power from Christ to establish in the Churches what Christ commanded and gave them in commission nothing of their owne but as 1 Cor. 11.23 that they received from the Lord that they delivered to the Saints 5. The Scriptures in an expresse manner forbid Beleevers to be the servants of men in this point as to bow our consciences to their injunctions in the matters of Worship 1 Cor. 7.23 in Civil things we may and ought but not in divine and spirituall things there Christ alone must have active obedience Psal 45.11 and hence it is that the Scriptures doe charge us not to serve God after the traditions doctrines and commandements of men let them pretend never so much holines and zeale for the glory of God Mat. 15.9 Col. 2.7 8 20 21. the reason is because God will be worship●d after his own mind and will revealed to us in the Scriptures and not after the wisdome of men 6. The Scriptures reprove and sharply rebuke such as stoop and bowe their consciences to the precep●s and commands of men in serving and worshipping of God as Hos 5.11 Esay 29.13 Gal. 4.9 10. 7. The Scriptures hold it forth as matter of commendation to the Saints when they have withstood the authority of men in the matters of Gods worship and rather suffered their bodies to die then their consciences to be defiled by ye●lding to their humane injunctions as the three Children Dan. 3. Revel 3.4 14.4 8. The Scr●ptures hold it forth as a property and character of Antichrist to make Lawes and impose them on the consciences of m●n 2 Thes 2.4 and so Rev. 13.16 17. 9. The Scriptures take away whatsoever may be thought to be a warrant for us from men to worship God by besides which Jesus Christ hath left us a rule to walk by in his written Word 1. They take away the wisdome of men as a warrant for us in the worship of God as 1 Cor. 3.20 Coloss 2.20 21 22 23. 2. They take away whatsoever seemeth good in our own eyes Deut. 12.8 Esay 66 3. 3. T ey take away mens traditions and customes Mar. 7.9 Colos 2.8 Act. 21.21 Deut. 18.9 Levit. 18. ult Jerem. 10.3 and whatsoever inventions of men as Psal 1●6 29 39. Ps 99.8 Deut. 4.2 12.32 Prov. 30.6 4. T ey take away the very will and commands of men as Hos 5.11 Amos 4.4 Mat. 15.9 Mar. 7.7 Col. 2.22 Tit. 1.14 Esay 29.13 5. They take away whatsoever word or doctrine comes from Ministers or any other which cannot be resolved into the written word of Christ as in Ezek. 13.3 7. Esay 8.20 Gal. 1.8 9. 1 Cor. 4.6 6. They take away all good intentions of men in this businesse as ●o 2 Sam. 6.7 1 Sam. 13.9 10 13. 1 Chro. 15.13 2 Chro. 26.16 7. It takes away all examples of men though never so eminent Ezek. 20 18. 1 Cor. 11.1 8. It rebukes the counsels of States for their boldnesse this way and layes it as a blot on t●em shewing that by this means people have been brought to Idolatry as 1 King 12.26 27 28 29 30. 2 Chron. 25.16 Jer. 19.5 7. Mich. 6. ult 9. It takes away from men all power to make Lawes to binde the Consci●nces of Beleevers so much as in things that are indifferent * Vid. M. Burr Heart-Divisions p. 159 160 161. where he discourseth excellently to this point For
be seen in the Booke on this place His point is this That as the Lord doth give a calling and grace so a people towards whom it is especially blessed with Gods calling and grace there are a people designed towards whom it is especially blessed It is true the Apostle had a more large flock the care of all Churches was upon him but wheresoever God giveth a calling there he giveth a People of whom the Minister may say toward you Grace is given me of God Act. 20.28 1 Pet. 5.2 God hath assigned every ordinary Minister a portion of his people For this is the difference between extraordinary as the Apostles Evangelists the seventy Disciples and our ordinary Pastors The Apostles had an universall Commission and the Evangelists were Delegates of the Apostles Durante beneplacito that is as long as they pleased The seventy if not Evangelists which some of the Antients incline to yet they were illimited helpers and fellow-labourers in the worke of the Lord But ordinary Ministers the Lord commanded to fasten them to certain places Tit. 1.5 ordaine Elders City by City and in the Councel of Chalcedon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ne ●icatur men●icat in Palae●tra infelix Clericus Grec Scoliast the 6. Chap. Let none be ordained at large lest he prove a wandering Jonathan Every Minister must be 1. Separated 2. Authorized 3. Have allotted to him a certaine portion of people which may be instructed by him which the Diminutive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may seeme to insinuate Now as God doth give every Pastor his severall flocke so he will that we travell in leading of them we must not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be B. B. in other mens Dioceses lest God say who required this at your hands When the Lord lighteth candles he doth find candlesticks on which to set them when he giveth a calling he giveth a people amongst whom this function should be exercised in whose consciences he doth give his Ministers a speciall report c. And thus we see the judgement of both these reverend Divines full up to the busines in hand There remaineth only one objection to be answered and then I shall give in the severall inferences from what hath beene laid downe Obj. The objection is this That from what hath been delivered it will follow that the word of God should be bound if every Minister should be tyed within the compasse of his own Congregation Sol. I Answer it doth not follow my reason is because as I noted before there is a greater liberty allowed by Christ in the preaching of the Word then there is in the administration of the Seales and Censures the one cannot be done but Virtute officii the other may be done only * vid. A little but learned Treatise of late set forth concerning preaching by those that are not ordaind minsters Virtute donorum one that is not in the number of Wisdomes maidens by vertue of office yet may be one of Wisdoms children whom God may so blesse in the exercise of the gifts and graces of the Spirit to be an instrument of turning many to righteousnes Dan. 12.3 As for those that are in office and called to particular Churches doubtlesse they are not so tyed to their own Congregations but that they may preach in other Churches besides their own as M. Baines hath well observed out of Clemens lib. 2. constit cap. 48. and not only in other churches of the same constitution or with their own according to the Gospell but in such assemblies and meetings of people that are not yet converted to the faith of Christ if they may be permitted and have liberty given them especially if they be desired and entreated as we find the servants of Christ have done in former times as in Act. 14.7 In which Cities of Lyconia and the inhabitants were for the time Idolaters as in ver 11 12 13. of that chapter so Act. 17.22 where we find that Paul in Mars Hill a place that was consecrated to Idolatrous worship takes occasion to preach the Gospell to those heathens and doubtlesse so may the Ministers of Christ that are in office if they may have liberty given them take occ●sion to exercise their gifts in preaching Jesus Christ to the Congregations of men and women yet uncalled and in an Idolatrous and Antichristian State Indeed those of the rigid Separation do deny the Ministers of those they call Independant Churches this liberty A digression touching the rigid Separatists that will not allow any to preach or hear in the meeting places commonly known by the name o● Churches because they wer● at first dedicated to Idolatrous superstitious uses saying that Paul was forced to that place of Mars Hill when he preacht the knowledge of God in Christ to the Athenian Idolaters but I answer though it should be granted that by violence he was carried by the Athenians to that Idolatrous place which the words will not yeeld to them ver 19. but suppose it yet it seemes when he came there he was not forced to preach but what he did he did voluntarily ver 22. as one that had a fit opportunity put into his hands to do good it seemes that the former words of their taking him bringing him to that place was no other but their bringing him to a place of greater conveniency to deliver and make known the truth then the market place was And without question the Apostle knew under the Gospell all places were alike to hold forth the truths of Christ none holy nor uncleane but one as lawfull to preach Christ in as another all things being pure to those that are pure Tit. 1.15 and for that place of 1 Cor. 8.10 where the Apostle forbids believers to sit at meate in the Idols Temple it is manifest that it was in case of scandal offence to them that were weake not that the thing was simply in it selfe an evill as we may see ver 9. and Rom. 14.14.15 now as for those places wherein the mixt multitude do meet here in England ordinarily commonly called Parish churches though many of them were dedicated to Saints and superstitious uses by the Papists and the ignorant people have formerly put holines in them yet now these abuses being removed and ignorant people may be better informed in this point if they please as is evident by the late Ordinance of the honourable house of Commons for the removing of all scandalous and offensive Pictures and Monuments of Idolatry and these places lookt upon as only such where for more conveniency the worship of God may be performed I see no reason why Ministers and other gifted men may not preach and the Saints comfortably and without sinne come to heare and enjoy the ordinances of Christ in them so they be performed according to the order of the Gospell * And this was ●he judgement ●f M. Robinson ●●e his Apolo●y p. 49.
in their pollutions but also all endeavours to reforme the worship of Christ and exalting his Kingdome here in England will be greatly obstructed if not altogether in vaine and to no purpose For grant the Prelaticall government be removed and the Presbteriall set up in the roome of it which many wise men do much question and not without cause yet they will find it a work not so feisable possible to rule govern the rude multitude as they imagine but notwithstanding all their terrible thunderbolts of excommunication and delivering them over Brachio seculari they will be the rude multitude still if they should sit never so much in the chaire of Repentance of the Presbyterians making yet that would have no spirituall efficacy upon their hearts but they would be loose still and prophane still as wofull experience shewes it in Scotland and other places where this Discipline is on foot 11. Lastly to adde no more Is not this the day of Englands Vowes to become the Lords and his Christs Have they not covenanted Reformation in the worship of God according to the rule of his Word and not after the will and commands of men or their own or others inventions And doth not the Lord now expect that they should performe their vowes If any desire further Arguments to move them hereunto they may read M. Burroughs his Moses Choise that hath much to this purpose from p. 260. to p. 335. So that all these things rightly and duely weighed I hope the godly will be provoked every where speedily to set upon this course of joyning together where they live or to some particular churches neare them where they may enjoy fellowship with Jesus Christ and his Saints and be built up from glory to glory How they should be able to set about this excellent worke I shall shew in the next Chapter that followeth CHAP. VI. How and in what manner the godly are to embody and joyn themselves together into holy church-fellowship in the places where they live and what concernes them to know and practise after their embodying THis Chapter consists of two parts 1. How the godly are to embody 2. What concernes their knowledge and practise after embodying Touching the first the embodying of the Saints together For the better effecting of it three things are to be done by them 1. They are to informe themselves touching the right order of the Gospell what it is and how it was practised by the churches in the dayes of the Apostles before it was defloured and abused with the dreggs of mens inventions The Saints are to observe the pattern in the Mount that is they are to looke to the Primitive institutions of Christ and observe them and walke according to them in all the worship of God When Moses was to build the Tabernacle he was to looke to the pattern that God gave him in the Mount and he did so and he was judged faithfull before the Lord for so doing Heb. 3. and David after him and other of the Servants of God they diligently looked into the Booke of the Law that they might know how to proceed in such a work as this as building the Temple and thus Jesus Christ when the question was put to him about divorce he brings them to the first institution and the Apostle Paul in the busines of the Supper of the Lord he raiseth them up to the consideration of the first institution 1 Cor. 11.24 25. And so should the godly in this way of becomming a Temple and House to God and Jesus Christ looke how and in what manner it was done in the Premitive times and there is great reason for it 1. Because as Tertullian saith Quod primum optimum that which is first is best 2. Because the Primitive order was left to be a pattern to all succeeding generations till Jesus Christ himselfe do come 3. Because in so doing we give a testimony of our honouring of Christ in following his commands And lastly because then we may expect his blessing on our endeavours but on the contrary we shall provoke him to anger as they did of old that tooke not the due and right order of bringing the Arke to Jerusalem 1 Cron. 15.13 2. When we have done so then we are to sit down and compare our selves in our present stations with that first order of the Gospell and see how farre short we have come of it and then be ashamed and blush and be confounded before the Lord for the neglect of our duty all this while and beg pardon through Christ as Hezekiah did for those that have eaten the Passeover otherwise then it was written i. e. then God had instituted and ordained 2 Cron. 30 18 19. and this is requisite to such a condition Ezek. 43.11 12. and if they be ashamed of all they have done shew them the forme of the house and the fashion thereof 3. When the godly have endeavoured this then in the strength of the Lord of glory they are to set upon the bringing of themselves and all they take in hand about this worke to that Primitive order Q. But you will say we may mistake in this point unlesse we be directed as many do to this day some going too farre on the right hand and others too farre on the left and both are dangerous It would be necessary therefore to afford us some helpe by shewing what this order of the Gospell is which the godly are to come up unto in their practise for the right worshipping of God Ans To helpe therefore in this thing I shall afford what light I have received from Jesus Christ in the Scriptures touching this particular and referre all I have to say touching the true order of the Gospell the Saints are to observe to three heads 1. To right meanes of worship 2. To right persons that are to make use of those meanes 3. To the right manner or method of putting these meanes into practise Touching the first of these the right meanes of worship Right meanes 〈◊〉 worship Now by these I understand true and pure ordinances such as Jesus Christ the Head King of his Church hath alone instituted and commanded Mat 28. ult 1 Cor. 11.23 and 12.28 And the reason is this because if the worship we performe and bring to God be not of his own ordering and appointing though it be never so specious and glorious to the eye of man and pleasing to our selves yet it will not please the Lord for he will be served in his owne way and by his owne meanes and institutions or else he rejects it as Commandement 2. Col. 2. Quest But what are those Gospell-Ordinances and meanes of worship which Jesus Christ hath instituted and ordained for the Saints to use Ans 1. The pure Word of God preached as it is contained in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament Mat. 28.19 Act. 6.4 Rom. 1.16 10.14 15 16 17. 2. The pure and precious
sometimes did to write Books of Recantation and have as little credit as comfort in what they have done this way 6. If the truth were knowne and men would speak out all is in their hearts it is not to be doubted but a chiefe ground of many mens crying downe this way of the Lord and those that walke in it is no other but their envy at those especially young ones to whom the Lord hath in these last dayes imparted and communicated greater measures of his Spirit and larger discoveries of the mysterie of the Gospel according to the promise Joel 2.28 Act. 2.17 wherein young men shall have the priority of old Because the Lord is good therefore their eye is evill as Christ said to them Mat. 20.15 that took offence at his kindnesse to those that came into the vineyard after them and wrought but an houre But this is an evill frame of heart and cleane contrary to that of Moses that wisht that all the Lords people were Prophets Num. 11.29 7. But lastly doth not this generality of opposition against this way alledged conclude and evidence the truth and goodnes of it especially when such opposition tends to the increase and furtherance of it and that also amongst the most pious and spirituallest Beleevers What though the Authors in the * D. Bastwick the Captain of the Presbyterian Army as he styles himselfe M. Prinne M. Edwards M. Baily M. Vicars Marg. as men not having yet learned or else not regarding what Christ in the Scriptures requires of them Rom. 12.16 17 18 19 20 21. James 1.19 20 21. 1 Pet. 2.1 have cryed it downe as the most pernicious way yet all the dirt they have throwne in the face of it cannot make the Saints out of love with it In the dayes of the Apostles those that embraced the doctrine of the Gospel and right way of worshipping God were generally condemned and spoken against as Sectaries and Heretiques Act. 14.5 14. Act. 28 22. yet that could not hinder the prevailing of it being it was of God So neither shall the worst that men can doe hinder it now but maugre all the powers of hell and the world that oppose it it shall take place for Christ must reigne Impediment 2 2. The second impediment that lies in the way of divers godly persons is this That salvation may be had in that present church-state they for the present are and therefore judge it a nee lesse thing to come into any other Church-state To such I shall commend these few considerations 1. That though it be granted as a truth which cannot be denyed that its possible for men to be saved though they never come into a right visible Church-state and order because faith and salvation is not so tyed to the visible church as that there is no partaking thereof out of it And though it be true also that conversion may be obtained and is in many of the Parish Assemblies as we know by experience yet how unkindly do such Christians deale with Jesus Christ that shall as the Head and King of his church appoint ordaine a holy order for his Saints to observe in their serving and worshipping of God and yet they shall refuse to submit thereunto is it not a disparagement to the wisdome of the Lord Jesus that hath thus ordained a church order for his Saints to walke in and yet they shall count it a needlesse thing 2. Such should consider whether the truth of grace doth not teach them to have respect to the whole revealed will of God and not to dispense with themselves in the neglect of obedience to any the least part of it and if so then how dangerous is it for them to sit downe and content themselves in their present disordered station without comming out of it to Sion as Christ commandeth Esay 52.11 with Rev. 18.4 3. Is not this an argument of a low Spirit exceeding earthly c●rnall like those Potters that remained of the children of Israel in Babylon when the rest were returned to Jerusalem 1 Chron. 4 23. that preferred their carnall ease in Babylon before the enjoyment of the true and pure worship of God in Sion do not such men exceedingly degenerate from the servants of God of old spoken of in the Scriptures ●hat have greatly longed after and mourned with much bitternes when they have been deprived of the enjoyment of God in his ordinances as David and others Esay 56.3 4. Psal 84. 4. Doth not this plainly discover to the world that such men are to this day marvellous ignorant of this great mystery of the Gospel they see not the lustre and beauty that shines forth in the visible Churches of the Saints a right and true communion of Saints having fellowship with Christ in his own ordinances is a meere riddle a paradox to them the comly order and sweet harmony of Jacobs Tents and Israels Tabernacles is not discerned by them though a Balaam himselfe was greatly affected therewith Oh when shall this darkenes be removed 5. I would faine know whether such poore soules are not great enemies to their own happines and hinderers of their own welfare For first have they not many precious Talents Gifts and Graces bestowed upon them for which they shall be accountable to Christ one day which now are as it were put under a Bushel lye asleep and of no use or benefit to themselves or others all which if they were once come into a society of faithfull and zealous Saints would be occasioned frequently to be brought forth and improved to the glory of God the benefit of others and their own great encrease and advantage Secondly are they not subject to many wanderings and out-goings from God and so have need of some to watch over their precious soules to prevent as it is possible such swervings from Christ by their wholsome and gentle admonitions exhortations and reproofes which priviledge they might enjoy if they were in this order of the Gospell but now are deprived of Thirdly are they not many times so overtaken through the subtilty of Sathan deceitfullnes of sin that they not only fall into sinne but there lye and continue in their back-sliding and have none to looke after them to restore them againe to set their broken bones in joynt again whereas if they were in this way of the Lord the Gospell requires how sweetly might they be recovered according to the injunction of the Apostle to the Church of the Galatians Gal. 6.1 And therefore doubtlesse those men that thus reason as before that it s no great matter to come into any other church-state then they are are no small enemies to their own good 6. Lastly may it not be just with God to leave men to themselves in this thing and for their slighting of his wayes sweare in his wrath that they shall never enter into this rest of his that he gives his Saints that he brings to Sion Let us feare